Monday, July 27, 2015

Dust to Dust

A couple of weeks ago I, whose organizational chops are not equal to setting up a two-car motorcade, contrived to organize and get through my father's funeral at the San Francisco Presidio National Cemetery. I am astonished that I did not fuck up.

The kindness and efficiency of the VA and cemetery officials who were involved in the affair cannot be overstated: the entire family, and I in particular, will be forever grateful for their efforts.

Der Alte's remains were in a container the size of a shoebox, but surprisingly heavy as I lowered them into the hole. The presence of my siblings, of most of my nieces and nephews, and of a few of the following generation, made the ceremony a little easier. My thanks to all.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Life in These United States

This:

When I was growing up my parents were loyal subscribers to the “Reader’s Digest,” which I regret to report informed my own foreign policy views until about 1966, when it occurred to me that I was just four years from conscription age, and that a lot of late teens were returning from Southeast Asia in body bags. Anyway, the little magazine used to include a regular feature “Life in These United States,” with charming humorous anecdotes about our lives in the most prosperous and virtuous country ever.

That was a long time ago.

A few days back, Coast Guard veteran Walter Scott was shot to death—in the back, from twenty feet away—by a sociopathic police officer on the payroll of the North Charleston SC police force. The official account of the episode was that the victim attempted to grab the cop’s taser, and that the policeman shot in self-defense. A bystander’s video gives the lie to this account.

No video? The official story would never have been questioned. Officer Slager would have quite literally got away with murder. He may yet.

This is not—is not—an isolated incident. Summary executions and fabricated evidence are SOP at need at every level of law enforcement.

This will not change in the lifetimes of anyone who reads this. What needs to change is the common delusion that we live in a society that does not countenance this conduct.

This is how we live today.
This is how we live today.
This is how we live today.

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

The Tempest, 2015

I will not apologize to William Shakespeare since he is, like, long dead:

Full fathom five thy country lies,
Of its wealth are weapons made;
Google’s servers are its eyes,
All thy former rights will fade.
Paid for by the Kochs’ spare change:
Plutocrats both rich and strange.
CPAC cheers this fresh new hell:
Ka-ching!
Same way past republics fell. Ka-ching!

We are so fucked...

Monday, September 15, 2014

Further to Tech

After considerable pressure from friends, family, employer, I have at last embraced the Dark Side, and in consequence the number of people in North America who do not own mobile phones has fallen from 250 to 249. I presently look at the device with a certain sour suspicion, but I imagine that a few months from now the Kool-Aid blood levels will have risen to life-threatening numbers. I still don't feel good about this.

The graphic has been lifted, with unauthorized gratitude, from vfxjake.com.

Remembering 2001


No, not that one. The one from 1968.

In the book HAL's Legacy, contributor Donald Norman points out a number of particulars in which the filmmakers were mistaken as to the direction that computer interfaces were to take. What's sad, though, is that, HAL conspicuously excepted (and we now have automated subroutines that can mimic very sophisticated elements of human cognition without, as yet, a trace of actual self-awareness*), a rationally-ordered global civilization could have accomplished much of the spread into space envisaged by 2001: the orbiting wheel, the moon bases, even a manned mission to the outer planets would all have been plausibly within the reach of a planetary society less determined to squander its treasure and energies on plunder and war. Kubrick's vision is a reproach to our failure, and also a transcendent cultural artifact of the last century, fit to stand comparison with Genesis or the Iliad as expressions in mythic terms of their respective civilizations.

*This will, I predict, come about in my lifetime, should I have the misfortune to reach my father’s present age (he’s closing on 93 in another fortnight; I’m 62), and when software sentience is at last detected I suspect it will be some years after the fact.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Happy fucking birthday, George W. Bush

I repost this from a predecessor blog because it’s a particularly fraught anniversary, and because I still think that something like a malign configuration of the stars hovered over that morning, then so hopeful (reposting follows):

On this date many years ago, a Saturday, it was, I flickered into consciousness from sleep as—ah, Nabokov described it in a similar context in Ada—“the tiger of happiness fairly leaped into being.” I woke up, entwined and ungarbed, with a young woman whom I’d been stalking (as she would likely put it today) for over a quarter of my young life. I don’t think that the morning assembly of reality has ever rocketed up such a vertical gradient of joy, and I’m astonished looking back that my nose didn’t bleed. It all ended badly about a dozen years later, and while I don’t hold any truck with astrology (we Leos aren’t that credulous), I have to scratch my head at the thought that this radiant morning was also G.W. Bush’s twenty-eighth birthday. Clearly doom and grief were in the air, all unnoticed then...

Saturday, June 28, 2014

A colleague spins down toward the drain




Edit: I neglected to mention that I had never heard the name “Thomas Pynchon” before David pronounced these syllables. Never! I had much to learn, and not merely from the faculty.

The term “colleague” must be here understood with air quotes, because the last time D.G. Myers and I shared a paycheck was 1974. We’d been dishwashers together for two years at what was then called “College Five” at the University of California at Santa Cruz, which at that time had an undergraduate population of under four thousand. D.G., or “David” as he was known in the dishroom, was a Lit major, and took his studies considerably more seriously than I did: I was a lazy lad, and slid through undergraduate life along whichever path of least resistance presented itself at any given fork in the road.

I used to imagine in those days that I would, once I’d grown to man’s estate, be very proud and great, and also have a tenured position at UCSC or at some equivalently easy and scenic academic venue. I was prepared to do New England. Part of the contemplated deal was that I would shed the integuments (tweed jackets, leather elbows) from time to time as I romped through the downy loins of generations of undergraduate cuties.

I understand in retrospect that this was not a realistic career path. For one thing, the professional model to which I aspired, rather thick on the ground back in the early seventies, has been hunted almost to extinction since then. I yield to no man (except, perhaps, to D.G.) regarding my respect for the late R.V. Cassill, but the cultural climate that gave rise to “Up the Down Co-Ed” is gone, gone, forever gone.

When we toiled together at the far end of a conveyor belt, D.G. and I were, I believe, politically on the same or on nearby pages. At the outset, Nixon was still needlessly prolonging the Vietnam war, and no sane man of college age (D.G. retained his student deferment draft status; I’d lost mine in 1971 but had fetched a high lottery number) was keen to be, as John Kerry once memorably put it, “the last man to die for a mistake.”

I haven’t seen David in forty years, although we’ve recently connected after a fashion online. He’s in the latter stages of what used to be called a “wasting disease”: fourth stage metastatic prostate cancer. He won’t make old bones, not least because the insubordinate cells are at present romping through the very skeletal components.

He is today and, I gather, for a few decades a self-identified political conservative. He has also been since 1989 and until a few weeks ago a professional academic, and from what I understand of that scene from his accounts and elsewhere, the conversion is not entirely incomprehensible. I attended a graduation ceremony at UC Santa Cruz in the early 1990s, and the event was so claustrophobically lefty and self-righteous that I probably would have written in Barry Goldwater had the next general election been held the following week.

I believe that somewhere on his Commonplace Blog David mentioned that his transition to conservatism either began or took impetus from domestic opposition to the Israeli move into Lebanon in 1982. Back in the dishroom days, David had casually alluded to his Judaism (he mentioned that the nervous father of a female roommate, attempting to be ingratiating, had said “So you’re Jewish, are you? My tape measure was made in Israel!”), but I was not then aware that he’d been raised a Southern Baptist before electing to convert in his late teens. He went from Reform to Conservative to Orthodox with at least notional circumcisions at each stage, which counts for “skin in the game” in my book.

I'm personally agnostic regarding most of the world's irredentist conflicts. I don't care whether or not the Kurds or the Uighars ever get spots on the maps. My relatives have their own skins in the game in Belfast and in the Pyrenees, but I lose no sleep about Irish union or Basque independence. I'm a deracinated American. And I am frankly indifferent as to who prevails in the struggle for the territories outside israel's 1967 borders.

DGM's identification with American conservatism certainly places the two of us politically at odds today, and likely for the past several elections. He likely voted in 2008 to place Sarah Palin, whose election to Wasilla dogcatcher would trouble me, a “heartbeat away” from the presidency. I personally count myself an “Eisenhower Republican,” and have voted the past three general elections the way the thirty-fourth president’s relatives did.

This being said, DGM courageously—or foolishly?—forfeited a paid gig at Commentary a few years ago when he quite reasonably argued that the GOP/conservative opposition to “gay marriage” was a losing proposition.

DGM and I probably won’t see one another again. I regret that. He was one of just three or four fellow undergraduates I knew at UC Santa Cruz (Mark Jarman was another) who was a serious scholar, and who subsequently followed that path. Myself? I tried to stay in Santa Cruz after graduation, and like most of my fellows I was shaken off after a year or two. My present gig is a profound betrayal of everything UCSC stood for, but it does pay the mortgage.

I regret that DGM will not survive me. In the intellectual sense, he deserves to. Indeed, in that realm he certainly will. Late note: the University of Chicago Press will be re-issuing Peter De Vries' novel The Tunnel of Love with David’s foreword in November.

Last update: David died on Friday, September 26, 2014.

(This post has been reconstructed (and now updated) from one posted a couple of days ago and accidentally deleted)